Agh, this again.
Tilesets killed my teacher. Now I'm here to avenge his death. After a musical training montage.
But seriously, CP437 works for me. Probably because I came here from Nethack.
My experience of tilesets is like seeing someone draw nipples and eyes on
"Nude Descending the Staircase" in crayon, because, well, "real nudes have eyes and nipples."
That is not a turkey. A real turkey is a 't'. A red '
t'. That is Michael Jackson's zombified left hand in white glove, walking the earth and laying eggs.
Only thing I can figure, is people are having some sort of Catholic School PTSD flashback of hairy nuns wielding rulers when they see the letters of the alphabet, "EYE BEFORE EE! *crack!*" "I'll show her.", they say to themselves, through the tears and shame. "I'll... *sob*... never use the alphabet again."
I don't actually mind the isometric tileset of Stonesense. So there's that. Of course, I don't have to actually try to do anything with it but look at it and go, "oooh! pretty!" Well, not so much "oooh pretty" as hideous and awkward and blocky. Like that farm plot that looked like someone took a flaming dump on a pizza box.
I blame tv, and to a greater extent the internet. Not only did we, growing up, have no idea what a muffin looked like, we were unclear on it's general position on the human body. I think those early days of trying to visualize what mysteries the fairer folk concealed, really gave our imaginations a workout. Like a dwarf operating a pump. And not at all like a mutilated accident victim inexplicably standing on two barrels.
So, yes, ASCII people are just plain better human beings, as I've clearly demonstrated. But I don't expect tileset people to be able to understand. Please see:
Dunning–Kruger effect